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We spent three nights on the road (the young Earl refusing to travel on the Sabbath) and entered London around midday on the sixteenth day of May, which, by coincidence, was the Feast of Saint Brendan the Voyager. Timothy, the least superstitious of men, nevertheless took this as a good augury for my success.

‘It’s going to prove an easy case for you to solve, Roger. Come and find me at Baynard’s Castle this afternoon, when we’ve both had a chance to settle in. Duke Richard and his Duchess are staying there. They decided against Crosby’s Place so that His Grace could be more in the company of his sister. If he’s not too busy, he’ll be pleased to see you. But he won’t be able to afford you much time.’

I didn’t take this amiss. I knew from what Timothy had told me during our journey that this rare visit to London by the Duke of Gloucester was not simply to greet his youngest sister, but also to hold urgent talks with his brother concerning Scotland’s violation of her truce with England. Egged on, I learned, by the wily French King — who, typically, was also sheltering James III’s rebellious brother, the Duke of Albany, at his court — there had been almost daily raids across the Border throughout the past autumn and winter. Four days earlier, the Duke of Gloucester had been appointed the King’s Lieutenant-General in the North, authorized, so the Earl of Lincoln had informed us, to levy the men of the Scottish marches, ready for war.

It said much for the Duke’s family feeling that, in the midst of all this turmoil and uncertainty, he could find time to worry about Duchess Margaret’s probable grief at the death of her favourite’s son, and to want to have something done about solving the murder. I could understand why Timothy was so anxious not to let him down, and secretly determined that I would do my utmost to discover the culprit — although I naturally had no intention of telling Timothy this. Let him think me still resentful: it would keep him on his toes.

The Earl of Lincoln left us even before we entered London, making his way to Westminster where the King and Queen and most of the court were lodged. Timothy and I parted company outside St Paul’s, he riding south to Baynard’s Castle, between Thames Street and the river, I jogging along West Cheap to the Great Conduit, where I took the right-hand fork to Bucklersbury. And here, nestling, as Timothy had said, among the sweet-smelling grocers’ and apothecaries’ shops, I found the inn of St Brendan the Voyager still with its sign of the saint and his disciples in their skin-covered coracle, being kept afloat by the good offices of a sea monster.

I thought Reynold Makepeace might have forgotten me after more than two years, but he greeted me as though I were his long-lost brother, enquired solicitously after Adela and the children, and generally made me so welcome that I even began to enjoy this unsought and begrudged visit to the capital.

‘As luck would have it,’ he said, ‘you can have the same chamber that you shared with your wife. It was vacated only this morning by a merchant from Nottingham who had business in the city. And when I talk about luck, I mean it. London’s seething at the moment with people pouring in to catch a glimpse of Duchess Margaret. Many of the larger, more important inns have been commandeered for members of her retinue. Your guardian angel must be watching over you, guiding your footsteps here.’

The room was exactly as I remembered it — small, but spotlessly clean, opening off a gallery that ringed three sides of the Voyager’s inner courtyard. The bed, which took up most of the space, still sported the same goose-feather mattress and down-filled pillows. There were no other furnishings, but my wants were modest, having no luggage except my pack and the cudgel I had insisted on bringing with me despite Timothy’s reservations.

‘You won’t need your cudgel,’ he had objected. ‘You’ll be under royal protection. The Duke’s armourer can supply you with any weapons you might need to keep you safe in the London streets.’

But I preferred my own trusty ‘Plymouth cloak’ and my knife, both of which I was used to handling, and in this argument, the Earl of Lincoln, who had happened to overhear the altercation, had backed me up.

‘Better the weapons you know, Master Plummer, than those you don’t,’ he had said gaily, but decidedly; and I noted with amusement that Timothy gave in at once. The young man might parade and boast of his de la Pole and Chaucer blood, but he was a Plantagenet at heart, and expected to be treated as one.

The horse that had been hired for me from the Bell Lane stables, in Bristol, Reynold Makepeace readily agreed to house and feed for the duration of my stay in London at a slightly increased cost, to be added to the price of my room. I was happy to agree, and having donned a clean shirt and hose, brushed down my leather jerkin and combed my hair, set out for Baynard’s Castle as I had been instructed.

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